New Routine use in clinical practice and performance measurement · 2013. 12. 9. · 1. Two...

Post on 16-Oct-2020

1 views 0 download

Transcript of New Routine use in clinical practice and performance measurement · 2013. 12. 9. · 1. Two...

Patient-reported outcomes in the Netherlands

Routine use in clinical practice and performance measurement

Philip van der Wees The King’s Fund, London December 3 , 2013

From global perspective to local application

1. PRO measurement: perspectives from experts and leaders in the United States, England, and the Netherlands

2. Current application in the Netherlands at national level

3. Use of Routine Outcome Monitoring in mental health services

Perspectives of experts and leaders in 3 countries

Feasibility of using patient-reported outcomes in clinical practice and performance

measurement

Philip Van der Wees, Maria Nijhuis-van der Sanden, John Ayanian, Nick Black, Gert Westert, and Eric Schneider

Key questions

1. What are current approaches for using PRO measures in clinical practice and performance measurement?

2. What are determinants for further implementation?

3. Is it possible to integrate the collection of PRO for uses in clinical practice and performance measurement?

Country Reporting

programs

Measure

developers

Clinical practice

United States 10 5 20

The Netherlands 4 3 6

England 3 3 4

Participants (n=58; 88% response)

• National approaches for performance measurement: NHS (England), CMS (US), Miletus (Netherlands) • Local approaches for use in clinical practice: individual healthcare organizations, predominantly in the

US and the Netherlands

• Integrated approaches for use in clinical practice and performance measurement: Minnesota Community Measurement (US), and Mental Health Services (Netherlands)

Current Approaches in PRO measurement

Data collection for different purposes Is it possible to integrate data collection for PRO measurement in clinical practice and performance measurement? Advantages of integrated data collection:

• Meaningful use in clinical management and quality improvement • No duplication of efforts – multiple uses of data

Disadvantages of integrated data collection:

• Establishing routine data collection in clinical practice • Establishing realible and valid data for performance measurement • Tension between providers and purchasers

National approach

Patient-Reported Experience (PREMS) and Outcomes (PROMs) by the

Miletus Foundation

With acknowledgement to Caroline van Weert1

1 Director of Miletus Foundation

National approach • Miletus is collaborative of purchasers • PREMs + PROMs after treatment • Post-then-pre-test design • Pilots for ~10 conditions (elective surgery, chronic conditions) • Sample of patients via purchasers • Online, reminder, paper questionnaire

Example: Hip and Knee replacement: HOOS-PS, KOOS-PS, VAS, EQ5D N=73 orthopedic departments/clinics N=13,228 patients Response: 71%

Kwaliteit van zorg bespreekbaar

Kwaliteit van zorg bespreekbaar

Kwaliteit van zorg bespreekbaar

Integrated Approach

Routine Outcome Monitoring in mental health services

With acknowledgement to Edwin de Beurs1 and Annet Nugter2

1 Scientific Director National Benchmark Mental Health 2 Head of research mental health service “GGZ Noord-Holland-Noord”

Routine Outcome Monitoring

• Initiated by individual organizations in mental health services • Data collected at clinical level for screening, diagnosis, evaluation of care • National policy since 2011: mandate to submit data to national registry • Benchmark for internal use at provider level – Quality Improvement

• Benchmark at organizational level for purchasers - Contracting • Pay for performance based on data submission (process)

Routine Outcome Monitoring • In all patient groups: children, adolescents, adults, elderly

• Set of generic and specific instruments

• Assessments pre-, during and post-treatment Example: Mental disorders: Outcome Questionnaire (OQ-45) • Symptomatic Distress (SD) • Interpersonal Relations (IR) • Social Role (SR)

Adult patients (n=1540): pre-post change

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

First assessment Last assessment

Total score*Symptomatic Dis.*Interpersonal Rel.*Social Role*

OQ-45 rate of change and treatment duration

40455055606570758085

1-5 sessions6-9 sessions10-16 sessies> 16 sessions

1. Two separate worlds: PRO in clinical practice and PRO for performance measurement

2. Example of mental health shows feasibility of integrated approach, but also tension between providers and purchasers

3. Main challenges: establishing routine and valid (electronic) data collection; bridging different interests of providers and purchasers

4. Further policy: Tailoring to system characteristics; bringing patients in the lead

Conclusions